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New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION New Jersey Professional Standards for Teachers Alignment with InTASC NJAC 6A:9-3.3 (effective May 5, 2014) Background On April 1, 2014, the State Board of Education adopted updated Professional Standards for Teachers and School Leaders. The standards are listed below and the Department has also provided this Overview of the Professional Teaching Standards. Text in bold red type indicates additions and changes to the 2011 InTASC Model Core Teaching Standards to adapt them to our state context. Annotations about the changes are in blue type. Professional Standards for Teachers 6A:9-3.1 Purpose (a) The Professional Standards for Teachers identify the knowledge, skills, and dispositions that teachers need to practice responsibly. (b) The Professional Standards for School Leaders identify the knowledge, skills, and dispositions that school leaders need to practice responsibly. (c) The Professional Standards for Teachers and the Professional Standards for School Leaders set forth in N.J.A.C. 6A:9-3.3 and 3.4 shall be used in the accreditation of preparation programs, recommendation of candidates for certification, induction, educator evaluation, and the approval of professional development. (d) The level of mastery of the professional standards for teachers and school leaders shall be on a continuum from pre-service and novice through veteran educator. 6A:9-3.3 Professional standards for teachers (a) Teacher preparation, district induction, professional development programs, and the school district teacher evaluation system shall align with the [following] standards in (a)1 through 11 below. The standards are grouped into the following four domains: The Learner and Learning (Standards One, Two, and Three); Content Knowledge (Standards Four and Five); Instructional Practice (Standards Six, Seven, and Eight); and Professional Responsibility (Standards Nine, Ten, and Eleven). The elements of each standard are divided into three categories: Performances, Essential Knowledge, and Critical Dispositions. The Learner and Learning (Standards 1-3) 1. Standard One: Learner Development The teacher understands how learners grow and develop, recognizing that patterns of learning and development vary individually within and across the cognitive, linguistic, social, emotional, and physical areas, and designs and implements developmentally appropriate and challenging learning experiences. Updated August 2014 1 New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION i. Performances: (1) The teacher regularly assesses individual and group performance in order to design and modify instruction to meet learners’ needs in each area of development (cognitive, linguistic, social, emotional, and physical) and scaffolds the next level of development. (2) The teacher creates developmentally appropriate instruction that takes into account individual learners’ strengths, interests, and needs and that enables each learner to advance and accelerate his/her learning. (3) The teacher collaborates with families, communities, colleagues, and other professionals to promote learner growth and development. ii. Essential Knowledge: (1) The teacher understands how learning occurs--how learners construct knowledge, acquire skills, and develop disciplined thinking processes--and knows how to use instructional strategies that promote student learning. (2) The teacher understands that each learner’s cognitive, linguistic, social, emotional, and physical development influences learning and knows how to make instructional decisions that build on learners’ strengths and needs. (3) The teacher identifies readiness for learning, and understands how development in any one area may affect performance in others. (4) The teacher understands the role and impact of language and culture in learning and knows how to modify instruction to make language comprehensible and instruction relevant, accessible, and challenging. iii Critical Dispositions (1) The teacher respects learners’ differing strengths and needs and is committed to using this information to further each learner’s development. (2) The teacher is committed to using learners’ strengths as a basis for growth, and their misconceptions as opportunities for learning. (3) The teacher takes responsibility for promoting learners’ growth and development. (4) The teacher values the input and contributions of families, colleagues, and other professionals in understanding and supporting each learner’s development. 2. Standard Two: Learning Differences The teacher uses understanding of individual differences and diverse cultures and communities to ensure inclusive learning environments that enable each learner to meet high standards. i. Performances (1) The teacher designs, adapts, and delivers instruction to address each student’s diverse learning strengths and needs and creates opportunities for students to demonstrate their learning in different ways. (2) The teacher makes appropriate and timely provisions (e.g., pacing for individual rates of growth, task demands, communication, assessment, and response modes) for individual students with particular learning differences or needs. Updated August 2014 2 New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION (3) The teacher designs instruction to build on learners’ prior knowledge and experiences, allowing learners to accelerate as they demonstrate their understandings. (4) The teacher brings multiple perspectives to the discussion of content, including attention to learners’ personal, family, and community experiences and cultural norms. (5) The teacher incorporates tools of language development into planning and instruction, including strategies for making content accessible to English language learners and for evaluating and supporting their development of English proficiency. (6) The teacher accesses resources, supports, and specialized assistance and services to meet particular learning differences or needs and participates in the design and implementation of the IEP, where appropriate through curriculum planning and curricular and instructional modifications, adaptations and specialized strategies and techniques, including the use of assistive technology. (from 2004 NJ Standard 7.6 and 7.8) ii. Essential Knowledge (1) The teacher utilizes resources related to educational strategies for instruction and methods of teaching to accommodate individual differences and to employ positive behavioral intervention techniques for students with autism and other developmental disabilities. (2004 NJ Std 7.2) (2) The teacher understands and identifies differences in approaches to learning and performance and knows how to design instruction that uses each learner’s strengths to promote growth. (3) The teacher understands students with exceptional needs, including those associated with disabilities and giftedness, and knows how to use strategies and resources to address these needs. (4) The teacher knows about second language acquisition processes and knows how to incorporate instructional strategies and resources to support language acquisition. (5) The teacher understands that learners bring assets for learning based on their individual experiences, abilities, talents, prior learning, and peer and social group interactions, as well as language, culture, family, and community values. (6) The teacher knows how to access information about the values of diverse cultures and communities and how to incorporate learners’ experiences, cultures, and community resources into instruction. iii Critical Dispositions (l) The teacher believes that all learners can achieve at high levels and persists in helping each learner reach his/her full potential. (2) The teacher respects learners as individuals with differing personal and family backgrounds and various skills, abilities, perspectives, talents, and interests. (3) The teacher makes learners feel valued and helps them learn to value each other. (4) The teacher values diverse languages, dialects, and cultures and seeks to integrate them into his/her instructional practice to engage students in learning. Updated August 2014 3 New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION 3. Standard Three: Learning Environments The teacher works with others to create environments that support individual and collaborative learning, and that encourage positive social interaction, active engagement in learning, and self motivation. Performances i. Performances (1) The teacher collaborates with learners, families, and colleagues to build a safe, positive learning climate of openness, mutual respect, support, and inquiry. (2) The teacher develops learning experiences that engage learners in collaborative and self-directed learning and that extend learner interaction with ideas and people locally and globally. (3) The teacher collaborates with learners and colleagues to develop shared values and expectations for respectful interactions, rigorous academic discussions, and individual and group responsibility for quality work. (4) The teacher manages the learning environment to actively and equitably engage learners by organizing, allocating, and coordinating the resources of time, space, and learners’ attention. (5) The teacher uses a variety of methods to engage learners in evaluating the learning environment and collaborates with learners to make appropriate adjustments. (6) The teacher communicates verbally and nonverbally in ways that demonstrate respect for and responsiveness to the cultural backgrounds and differing perspectives learners bring to the learning environment. (7) The teacher promotes responsible learner use of interactive technologies to extend the possibilities for learning locally and globally. (8) The teacher intentionally builds learner capacity to collaborate in face-to-face and virtual environments through applying effective interpersonal communication skills. ii. Essential Knowledge (1) The teacher understands the relationship between motivation and engagement and knows how to design learning experiences using strategies that build learner self- direction and ownership of learning. (2) The teacher knows how to help learners work productively and cooperatively with each other to achieve learning goals. (3) The teacher knows how to collaborate with learners to establish and monitor elements of a safe and productive learning environment including norms, expectations, routines, and organizational structures. (4) The teacher understands how learner diversity can affect communication and knows how to communicate effectively in differing environments. (5) The teacher knows how to use technologies and how to guide learners to apply them in appropriate, safe, and effective ways. (6) The teacher understands the relationship among harassment, intimidation, bullying, violence, and suicide and knows how and when to intervene. (addition based on NJ legislation) Updated August 2014 4
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